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Chapter Objective:

The Market for Foreign Exchange. 5. Chapter Five. Chapter Objective: This chapter serves to introduce the student to the institutional framework within which exchange rates are determined.

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Chapter Objective:

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  1. The Market for Foreign Exchange 5 Chapter Five Chapter Objective: This chapter serves to introduce the student to the institutional framework within which exchange rates are determined. This chapter lays the foundation for much of the discussion throughout the remainder of the text, thus it deserves your careful attention. 5-0

  2. Chapter Outline • Function and Structure of the FX Market • FX Market Participants • Correspondent Banking Relationships • The Spot Market • The Forward Market • Exchange-Traded Currency Funds • Function and Structure of the FX Market • The Spot Market • Spot Rate Quotations • The Bid-Ask Spread • Spot FX Trading • Cross Exchange Rate Quotations • Triangular Arbitrage • Spot Foreign Exchange Market Microstructure • The Forward Market • Function and Structure of the FX Market • The Spot Market • The Forward Market • Forward Rate Quotations • Long and Short Forward Positions • Forward Cross-Exchange Rates • Swap Transactions • Forward Premium • Exchange-Traded Currency Funds • Function and Structure of the FX Market • The Spot Market • The Forward Market • Exchange-Traded Currency Funds • Function and Structure of the FX Market • The Spot Market • The Forward Market • Exchange-Traded Currency Funds 5-1

  3. FX Market Participants • The FX market is a two-tiered market: • Interbank Market (Wholesale) • About 100-200 banks worldwide stand ready to make a market in foreign exchange. • Nonbank dealers account for about 40% of the market. • There are FX brokers who match buy and sell orders but do not carry inventory and FX specialists. • Client Market (Retail) • Market participants include international banks, their customers, nonbank dealers, FX brokers, and central banks. 5-2

  4. Circadian Rhythms of the FX Market 5-3

  5. Correspondent Banking Relationships • Large commercial banks maintain demand deposit accounts with one another which facilitates the efficient functioning of the FX market. 5-4

  6. $200 £100 Correspondent Banking Relationships • Bank A is in London, Bank B is in New York. • The current exchange rate is £1.00 = $2.00. • A currency trader employed at Bank A buys £100m from a currency trader at Bank B for $200m settled using its correspondent relationship. Bank A London Bank B NYC 5-5

  7. Correspondent Banking Relationships • International commercial banks communicate with one another with: • SWIFT: The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunications. • CHIPS: Clearing House Interbank Payments System • ECHO Exchange Clearing House Limited, the first global clearinghouse for settling interbank FX transactions. 5-6

  8. The Spot Market • Spot Rate Quotations • The Bid-Ask Spread • Spot FX trading • Cross Rates 5-7

  9. Spot Rate Quotations • Direct quotation • the U.S. dollar equivalent • e.g. “a Japanese Yen is worth about a penny” • Indirect Quotation • the price of a U.S. dollar in the foreign currency • e.g. “you get 100 yen to the dollar” • See exhibit 5.4 in your textbook. 5-8

  10. 1 = .5072 1 . 9717 1 = 1 . 9717 . 5072 Spot Rate Quotations The direct quote for the pound is: £1 = $1.9717 The indirect quote for the pound is: £.5072 = $1 Note that the direct quote is the reciprocal of the indirect quote: 5-9

  11. The Bid-Ask Spread • The bid price is the price a dealer is willing to pay you for something. • The ask price is the amount the dealer wants you to pay for the thing. • It doesn’t matter if we’re talking used cars or used currencies: the bid-ask spread is the difference between the bid and ask prices. 5-10

  12. Ask Price – Bid Price Percent Spread = × 100 Ask Price $1.4744 – $1.4739 0.0339% = x 100 $1.4744 The Bid-Ask Spread • A dealer could offer • bid price of $1.4739 per € • ask price of $1.4744 per € • While there are a variety of ways to quote that, the bid-ask spread represents the dealer’s expected profit. 5-11

  13. big figure small figure The Bid-Ask Spread A dealer pricing pounds in terms of dollars would likely quote these prices as 12–17. Anyone trading $10m knows the “big figure”. 5-12

  14. Notice that the reciprocal of the S($/£) bid is the S(£/$) ask. £.5073 £1.00 = $1.00 $1.9712 The Bid-Ask Spread 5-13

  15. Bid Ask S($/£) 1.9715 – 20 S(£/$) .5071 – 72 £1 $10,000 × = £5,071 $1.9720 Currency Conversion with Bid-Ask Spreads • A speculator in New York wants to take a $10,000 position in the pound. • After his trade, what will be his position? Dealer will pay $1.9715 for 1 GBP; he is asking $1.9720. He will pay £.5071 for $1 and will charge £.5072 for $1 5-14

  16. Sample Problem • A businessman has just completed transactions in Italy and England. He is now holding €250,000 and £500,000 and wants to convert to U.S. dollars. • His currency dealer provides this quotation: GBP/USD 0.5025 – 76 USD/EUR 1.4739 – 44 • Assuming no other fees, what are his proceeds from conversion? 5-15

  17. Spot FX trading • In the interbank market, the standard size trade is about U.S. $10 million. • A bank trading room is a noisy, active place. • The stakes are high. • The “long term” is about 10 minutes. 5-16

  18. $1.50 £1.00 £0.75 × = €1.00 $2.00 €1.00 Cross Rates • Suppose that S($/€) = 1.50 • i.e. $1.50 = €1.00 • and that S($/£) = 2.00 • i.e. £1.00 = $2.00 • What must the €/£ cross rate be? €1.00 = £0.75 Pay attention to your “currency algebra”! 5-17

  19. Arbitrage • Definition: making profits with no risks • When do you have such an opportunity? When there is a violation of the law of one price. • Strategy: BLSH • Simple Hypothetical Arbitrage Example: • Store A: $0.4/TW, B: $0.5/TW • 1) Identify L & H • 2) Buy TWs from A using say $1 => 2.5 TWs • 3) Sell TWs to B => $1.25 => Profits=$0.25

  20. Caveats: • 1) Prices or American terms • 2) Identical products or FCs • 3) The price disparity cannot be sustained if the market is perfect as Changes in DD&SS=>Change the prices • With Bid-Ask Prices • Store A: $0.39~0.41/SF, B: $0.49~0.51/SF • 1) Identify L & H using (bid+ask)/2 average prices • 2) Buy TWs from A using say $1 at $0.41 => 2.439 TWs • 3) Sell TWs to B at $0.49=> $1.195 => Profits=$0.195 • Why smaller profits? Transactions costs!

  21. Triangular Arbitrage Question: Check whether we have an arbitrage opportunity. If so, determine the arbitrage profit with $10m investment. This is a complex one with 3 currencies and 3 locations. Let us simplify to have $/FC vs. $/the same FC. Select a FC from BP or Euro. The choice is not important as the results are the same. 5-20

  22. First, determine the (bid+ask)/2 in each location • D: $1.97145/BP, L:$1.474/e, A: e1.33135/BP • If we choose the BP, then • $/BP=1.97145 in D vs $/BP=1.474*1.33135=1.9624 in L&A => Low in L&A, and High in D • Since A does not trade $s, you need to go to L first, then A, D is the last place to go (High!) • 1) Buy euros in L using $10m @ $1.4742=>e6,783,340 • 2) Sell euros for BPs in A @e1.3317/BP =>BP 5,09e,745 • 3) Sell BPs for $s in D @$1.9712/BP => $10,040,789 • Note that you need to use Asked price to buy, Bid price to sell – always at a disadvantage.

  23. Spot Foreign Exchange Microstructure • Market Microstructure refers to the mechanics of how a marketplace operates. • Bid-Ask spreads in the spot FX market: • increase with FX exchange rate volatility and • decrease with dealer competition. • decrease as the trading volume increases • decrease as the trading frequency increases • Private information is an important determinant of spot exchange rates. 5-22

  24. The Forward Market • Forward Rate Quotations • Long and Short Forward Positions • Forward Cross Exchange Rates • Swap Transactions • Forward Premium 5-23

  25. The Forward Market • A forward contract is an agreement to buy or sell an asset in the future at prices agreed upon today. 5-24

  26. Forward Rate Quotations • The forward market for FX involves agreements to buy and sell foreign currencies in the future at prices agreed upon today. • Bank quotes for 1, 3, 6, 9, and 12 month maturities are readily available for forward contracts. • Longer-term swaps are available. 5-25

  27. Forward Rate Quotations Consider these exchange rates: for British pounds, the spot exchange rate is $1.9717 = £1.00 while the 180-day forward rate is $1.9593 = £1.00 • What’s up with that? Clearly market participants expect that the pound will be worth less in dollars in six months. 5-26

  28. gain $1,959,300 – $1,971,700 –$12,400 $HPR= = = pain $1,971,700 $1,97,1700 Forward Rate Quotations • Consider the (dollar) holding period return of a dollar-based investor who buys £1 million at the spot exchange rate and sells them forward: $HPR = –0.00629 Annualized dollar HPR = –1.26% = –0.629% × 2 5-27

  29. F180($/€) – S($/€) 360 1.60 – 1.55 f180,€v$ = × = × 2 S($/€) 180 1.55 Forward Premium • The interest rate differential implied by forward premium or discount. • For example, suppose the € is appreciating from S($/€) = 1.55 to F180($/€) = 1.60 • The 180-day forward premium is given by: = 0.0645 or 6.45% 5-28

  30. Long and Short Forward Positions • If you have agreed to sell anything (spot or forward), you are “short”. • If you have agreed to buy anything (forward or spot), you are “long”. 5-29

  31. Payoff Profiles profit If you agree to sell anything in the future at a set price and the spot price later falls then you gain. S180($/¥) 0 F180($/¥) = .009524 If you agree to sell anything in the future at a set price and the spot price later rises then you lose. loss Short position 5-30

  32. Payoff Profiles profit short position Whether the payoff profile slopes up or down depends upon whether you use the direct or indirect quote: F180(¥/$) = 105 or F180($/¥) = .009524. 0 S180(¥/$) F180(¥/$) = 105 -F180(¥/$) loss 5-31

  33. Payoff Profiles profit short position S180(¥/$) 0 F180(¥/$) = 105 When the short entered into this forward contract, he agreed to sell ¥ in 180 days at F180(¥/$) = 105 -F180(¥/$) loss 5-32

  34. 15¥ 120 Payoff Profiles profit short position S180(¥/$) 0 F180(¥/$) = 105 If, in 180 days, S180(¥/$) = 120, the short will make a profit by buying ¥ at S180(¥/$) = 120 and delivering ¥ at F180(¥/$) = 105. -F180(¥/$) loss 5-33

  35. Payoff Profiles profit Since this is a zero-sum game, the long position payoff is the opposite of the short. short position F180(¥/$) S180(¥/$) 0 F180(¥/$) = 105 -F180(¥/$) Long position loss 5-34

  36. 120 –15¥ Payoff Profiles profit The long in this forward contract agreed to BUY ¥ in 180 days at F180(¥/$) = 105 -F180(¥/$) If, in 180 days, S180(¥/$) = 120, the long will lose by having to buy ¥ at S180(¥/$) = 120 and delivering ¥ at F180(¥/$) = 105. S180(¥/$) 0 F180(¥/$) = 105 Long position loss 5-35

  37. Forward Market Hedge • If you are going to owe foreign currency in the future, agree to buy the foreign currency now by entering into long position in a forward contract. • Need to buy (or make an arrangement to buy) and turn around and deliver! • If you are going to receive foreign currency in the future, agree to sell the foreign currency now by entering into short position in a forward contract. • Need to make an arrangement to sell in case you do not plan to keep the FC 5-36

  38. Forward Market Hedge: an Example You are a U.S. importer of British woolens and have just ordered next year’s inventory. Payment of £100M is due in one year. Question: How can you fix the cash outflow in dollars? Answer: One way is to put yourself in a position that delivers £100M in one year—a long forward contract on the pound. 5-37

  39. 0 1 Forward Market Hedge: an Example Step 3 Fulfill your contractual obligation to forward contract counterparty and buy £100 million for $195 million. Step 1 Order Inventory; agree to pay supplier £100 in 1 year. Step 2 Take a Long position in a Forward Contract on £100 million. Step 4 Pay supplier £100 million (Suppose that the forward rate is $1.95/£.) 5-38

  40. $30m $1.65/£ $2.25/£ –$30m Forward Market Hedge Suppose the forward exchange rate is $1.95/£. If he does not hedge the £100m payable, in one year his gain (loss) on the unhedged position is shown in green. The importer will be better off if the pound depreciates: he still buys £100m but at an exchange rate of only $1.65/£ he saves $30 million relative to $1.95/£ $0 Value of £1 in $ in one year $1.95/£ But he will be worse off if the pound appreciates. Unhedged payable 5-39

  41. $30m $1.65/£ $2.25/£ –$30m Forward Market Hedge If you agree to buy £100 million at a price of $1.95 per pound, you will make $30 million if the price of a pound reaches $2.25. Long forward If he agrees to buy £100m in one year at $1.95/£ his gain (loss) on the forward are shown in blue. $0 Value of £1 in $ in one year $1.95/£ If you agree to buy £100 million at a price of $1.95 per pound, you will lose $30 million if the price of a pound is only $1.65. 5-40

  42. Forward Market Hedge Long forward The red line shows the payoff of the hedged payable. Note that gains on one position are offset by losses on the other position. $30 m Hedged payable $0 Value of £1 in $ in one year $1.65/£ $1.95/£ $2.25/£ –$30 m Unhedged payable 5-41

  43. SWAPS • A swap is an agreement to provide a counterparty with something he wants in exchange for something that you want. • Often on a recurring basis—e.g. every six months for five years. • Swap transactions account for approximately 56 percent of interbank FX trading, whereas outright trades are 11 percent. • Swaps are covered fully in chapter 14. 5-42

  44. Exchange Traded Currency Funds • An ETF where each share represents 100 euros. • Individual shares are denominated in the U.S. dollar and trade on the New York Stock Exchange. • The price of one share at any point in time will reflect the spot dollar value of 100 euros plus accumulated interest minus expenses. • Six additional currency trusts exist on the Australian dollar, British pound sterling, Canadian dollar, Mexican peso, Swedish krona, and the Swiss franc. • Currency is now recognized as a distinct asset class, like stocks and bonds. Currency ETFs facilitate investing in these currencies. 5-43

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